As Dikshit and Maken addressed the press conference, cabinet ministers in the Sheila Dikshit government, and party’s ex-MPs from Delhi were present.

Former Delhi CM Sheila Dikshit and DPCC president Ajay Maken at a press conference in New Delhi.(Vipin Kumar/HT PHOTO)

For the first time after the Congress in Delhi suffered a humiliating defeat at the hands of the Aam Aadmi Party (AAP) in 2015 assembly elections and lost municipal polls last year, the party on Wednesday put up a united front with the former chief minister Sheila Dikshit and state unit president Ajay Maken holding a joint press conference.

The meet was called to list out “failures” of the Aam Aadmi government, which completed three years on February 14.

Maken said he should have brought Dikshit on board earlier, admitting that he had “committed few mistakes but he is rectifying them”.

As Dikshit and Maken addressed the press conference, cabinet ministers in the Sheila Dikshit government, and party’s ex-MPs from Delhi were present.

“I admit that I have made few mistakes in the past. When I realised this, I approached Dikshit. My party colleagues were also of the opinion that we should come together and I should rectify my mistakes. As Delhi Congress president, I should have done this before municipal elections,” Maken said.

On Dikshit’s role in the future elections, Maken said that it is up to the Central leadership. “How can I decide? It is beyond my purview. She was the chief minister,” he said.

When mediapersons put the same question to Dikshit and asked whether she would be campaigning for the party, she skirted the question but said, “Congress always has one face.”

However, party insiders said that the possibility of bypolls on 20 assembly seats, which have fallen vacant after the disqualification of the Aam Aadmi Party (AAP) MLAs on office of profit charges, had brought estranged Delhi Congress leaders on the same platform.

Recalling the ‘episode’, party old timers said Maken had felt that by sending him to contest 2004 Lok Sabha election, Dikshit wanted to dislodge him from the state politics. “After Maken’s entry to Parliament, the gap between the two leaders widened further. Later, Dikshit was not involved in 2015 assembly elections, which we lost badly,” said a senior party leader.

Since Congress’ drubbing at the hands of AAP, Dikshit has stayed away from Delhi politics but had questioned Maken’s style of functioning. She blamed him when former Delhi Congress Arvinder Singh Lovely left the party to join Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) just before the 2017 municipal elections.

“I am very disappointed especially with the way Arvinder Singh ‘Lovely’ has left the party mid-way. Most party people complained that Maken does not reach out to everyone. He is not (easily) available. In democratic politics, the most important thing is to reach out to everyone and this is not happening at the moment,” she had said.